What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago this week?

“TO BE SOLD CHEAP FOR CASH … A VARIETY of ENGLISH GOODS.”
After more than seventy years, the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter ended its run with one last advertisement and a colophon that stated, “Printed by J. HOWE, at the Printing-Office in Newbury-Street.” John Campbell, the publisher, and Bartholomew Green, the printer, distributed the first issue of the Boston News-Letter, as the newspaper was initially named, on April 24, 1704. It became the first weekly newspaper published in the colonies, preceded only by a single issue of Publick Occurrences, a newspaper quickly shut down by authorities in 1690.
The first issue of the Boston News-Letter concluded with an “Advertisement” soliciting advertisements: “THis News Letter is to be continued Weekly; and all Persons who have any Houses, Lands, Tenements, Farmers, Ships Vessels, Goods, Wares or Merchandizes, &c. to be Sold or Lett; or Servants Run away; or Goods Stoll or Lost, may have the same Inserted at a Reasonable Rate; from Twelve Pence to Five Shillings.” Over the next seven decades, the Boston News-Letter carried countless advertisements, many of them promoting goods and services to readers experiencing a transatlantic consumer revolution. The notices concerning “Servants Run away” included enslaved men and women who liberated themselves by fleeing from their enslavers. Many other advertisements about enslaved people for sale also appeared in the pages of the Boston News-Letter alongside those promoting goods and services or placed for the various other reasons outlined in that first “Advertisement.”
Ownership of the newspaper changed several times. The Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter briefly suspended publication after the battles at Lexington and Concord in April 1775. When it resumed, it was the only newspaper that continued in Boston. All the others either closed or relocated to other towns. New issues sometimes came out sporadically (or “PUBLISHED OCCASSIONALLY,” according to the masthead of the October 13, 1775, edition), often as half sheets with two pages of content instead of the usual full sheets with four pages. Sometime in late September or early October, John Howe became the final printer of the newspaper. In his History and Bibliography of American Newspapers, 1690-1820, Clarence S. Brigham indicates that the last known issue was the February 22, 1776, edition, yet a quotation from the February 29 issue appeared in the Boston-Gazette on March 4.[1] Since publication of Brigham’s History and Bibliography in 1947, a copy of the February 29 issue has been located, digitized, and made accessible via Readex’s America’s Historical Newspapers. That last known issue consisted of only two pages. Most of the content consisted of news from London with some local updates from Boston. Half a dozen advertisements also appeared, including a final notice from Richard Jennys for a “VARIETY of ENGLISH GOODS.”
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[1] Clarence S Brigham, History and Bibliography of American Newspapers, 1690-1820 (Worcester: American Antiquarian Society, 1947), 328.
























